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HIS
FIRST PICTURE SHOW
Ben Hickernell '00 gets a leg up in movies
For an English major, using a 24p video
format for grainy effect, editing on a Macintosh computer, and with
a budget of $100,000, Ben Hickernell did rather well this year at
the Philadelphia
Film Festival. In April, the movie version of his Haverford
and 2001 Fringe
Festival-produced play cellar, about two former friends
who wind up fiendishly trapped in someone's basement with a minimum
of amenities and a gun with a single bullet in it, sold out in its
debut at the Festival for Independents; then it nearly sold out
the 400-seat Prince Theater, where it concluded. The buzz was good
enough to spark interest at the Sundance, Tribeca and Hamptons film
festivals (though dates remained unconfirmed at press time). "It
was great, I've only heard good things," the upbeat Hickernell
reports. "And even the mixed reviews — like the Swarthmore
and Drexel papers — weren't really negative."
Most plays are "static" when transferred
to cinema — even the 1953 Julius Caesar with Marlon
Brando, or Sidney Lumet's 1957 Twelve Angry Men, from the
Reginald Rose theater piece — but are helped by more characters
and conflict possibilities. Hickernell's and Bill Dawe's cellar,
which developed out of improvisational exercises with Haverford's
Lighted Fools comedy troupe in 1999, had only the two characters,
interacting in a combination of "realistical/fantastical"
confrontations that melded some higher philosophical themes with
commercial thrillerdom —" We wanted it to be an entertaining
mystery," Hickernell says, from his Church Street apartment:
" 'How did those two get into the cellar and how would they
get out?' — but also, a kind of musing: 'Is this still life
if the life I knew is still out there?' ."
Abigail Graber, who wrote the review for Swarthmore's
Phoenix online student newspaper, felt the pre-life and
after-life of the characters was insufficiently suggested, and that
though Hickernell rewrote the theater piece to include more characters
and flashbacks meant to provide a more rounded context, the static
quality of theater hadn't been fully transcended by the film. "I
can see what she means," Hickernell observed, "but the
premise of the work was confining and restrictive. I wanted the
audience to feel something outside of its own experience...at the
Fringe Festival we staged cellar in the basement under
AKA Records [in Old City] ." Hickernell wanted to subject audiences
to the same dusty, confined, restrictive atmosphere the play's two
characters, Fenton and Ned, had to endure: "People would cough
down there, but afterward they would say they felt it was cool..."
cellar was co-produced with Theater Exile,
an experimental Philadelphia company looking for quality film projects.
Reconstruction Pictures, which is pretty much Hickernell, operating
out of his Church Street pad, is seeking to form a kind of nonprofit
foundation-like structure from which to produce: "Theaters
have always run as nonprofits with grants from various foundations,"
he said. "Given costs today, and pressures for formulaic film-making,
I thought it would be interesting to try to make films that way."
He points out that the UK Film Council in Britain funds independents
with the proceeds of the National Lottery, and there have been some
precedents in Europe, but not many here. "It's a little tough,"
he admits. "Film people aren't looking for nonprofit sources,
and the foundations that fund theaters aren't looking to back films,
so far." But he's hopeful.
In 2003, Hickernell took a break from directing and
acting to work with a New York City production company called This
is That, best known for movies like 21 Grams and Eternal
Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. He saw that New York was becoming
an antidote for the compulsive feverishness of Hollywood, with young
producers working against the grain to produce idiosyncratic movies
that try to get at something besides max profit-taking: "But
don't get me wrong. I have nothing against making commercial successes...I
was an English major at Haverford who wrote my thesis on film, first
one to do so...It was on Terrence Malick's film The Thin Red
Line" [Ben was actually president of the Haverford Moviemakers'
Club]. " Bill [ Dawe] and I were working on improv scenes,
meeting weekly with Kim and Sue Benston, exploring possibilities
down in 'the crypt' in the Music Building, you know? We'd thought
of something, a situation, completely outside our experience...we'd
rehearse it in there, and soon connections and lines of direction
began to evolve into cellar."
Bill Dawe is now a teacher in Malvern, engaged and
"settling down," according to Hickernell, but Ben is working
off cellar's success to shoot another movie. This time
it will be more "artistically opened-up," a "family
drama" with a "message" and some "comedy,"
and will have a budget of $150,000: "You might wanta say that
we put most of our cash toward paying the actors and crew —
everybody gets paid — rather than spending it on
technical equipment...Maybe some of those Haverford alumni might
like to invest?..." |